| Takashi Shimura, Nobuo Kaneko, Kyoko
Seki , Miki Odagiri, Makoto Kobori , Yunosuke Ito.
Akira Kurosawa's Ikiru details the existential struggle of one
ordinary man in his desperate search for purpose. Upon learning
he has terminal stomach cancer, a low-level government bureaucrat
(Takashi Shimura) leaves his job of thirty years without a word
to find meaning in the year he has left to live. He is completely
alone in the world -- his wife is dead, his son is practically estranged,
and his co-workers (the people with whom he has more contact than
any others) are little more than strangers. Rather than face a death
alone in pathos, Shimura opts to make up for lost time by going
to the bar (for the first time in his life), spending every last
yen in his wallet and drinking himself to death. There he meets
a black-clad artist (a Mephistopheles to his Faust) who leads him
on a hellish (and darkly humorous) tour of the city after dark as
the two crawl through every booze-soaked juke-joint in town (Kurosawa's
classical training as a painter surfaces in this sequence; many
critics have noted the striking similarity of the crowded dance
hall scenes to the paintings of Hieronymous Bosch, (particularly
Walpurgis Night). Realizing he has missed nothing, Shimura then
sets his sight on a pretty young girl from the office to divert
his attention from his looming mortality. Although the girl fails
to serve as a lifebuoy, she does give him the inspiration to do
something meaningful -- to leave a legacy, however small, that makes
the world a better place. A synopsis of Ikiru cannot serve the film
justice; it simply must be seen. |